Historical records matching Waite Charles Hoyt

"...what I wanted to do," he said. Brooklyn Schoolboy is best remembered as great Yank By Ira Berkow 1984 New York Times News Service NEW YORK - On Saturday, the Brooklyn Schoolboy died. WaiteCharlesHoyt ... to rain delays so they could listen to the stories he spun, the best of which were captured in a record album called "WaiteHoyt in the Rain." His favorites were about his teammate Babe Ruth. His tales ... of that grand American folk hero helped to illuminate not only Ruth but WaiteHoyt as well. "The first time that I ever saw Babe Ruth was in the Boston Red Sox clubhouse," he once said. "I walked in to report ... to the Red Sox, and they took me around and introduced me to..."

"...to the Dodgers. Hall of Famer WaiteHoyt dies at 84 CINCINNATI Waite a of baseball's Hall of Fame and the top pitch- er on the famed New York Yankees died Saturday at Cin- cinnati's Jewish Hospital. He c anri Vmon ... - view about a year before his death. Hugglns was the greatest manager who WAITEHOYT ...pitched for '27 Yanks ever lived. He had Ruth to contend with an a lot of temperamental guys like me. his grave ... is about a quarter of a mile from where I'm going to be buried. Once in a I go out to put flowers on some people's graves and I pass his grave and I hear some noise. That's him turning over in his grave
..."

"...remembered as great Yank By Ira Berkow 1984 New York Times News Service NEW YORK --"On Saturday, the Brooklyn Schoolboy died. WaiteCharlesHoyt was just two weeks shy of his 85th birthday, but during his 21 ... they could listen to the stories he spun, the best of which were captured in a record album called "WaiteHoyt in the Rain." His favorites were about his teammate Babe Ruth. His tales of that grand American ... folk hero helped to illuminate not only Ruth but WaiteHoyt as well. "The first time that I ever saw Babe Ruth .was in the Boston Red Sox clubhouse," he once said. "I walked in to report to the Red Sox ... moon face, and he had an expression that would have ..."

"...and I hear some noise. That's him turning over in his grave.
"Joe Dugan, our third baseman, used to say, 'You
know, Waite, you and I killed him.' "
In that interview, Hoyt was skeptical of some ... NEWS-HERALD, Panama City, Fla., Sunday, Aug. 26,1984
Page 3GWaite Hoyt: Yankees' Hall of Fame pitcher dies
Associated Press
WaiteHoyt, a " - "ìli of
CINCINNATI member of baseball's Hal ... on television.'
New York Yankee WaiteHoyt
Announcements Kuhn fails to illuminate
Wrigley lighting issue
(EDITORS NOTE: The News-Herald will run announcements of local interest. Deadline is 5 p.m. one day before ... Fame and the top pitcher on the famed New York Yankees "Murderer's Row" teams, ..."

"...in Hiiicnmson KS 6750' i dOO 362 0002 Brooklyn Schoolboy is best remembered as great Yank By Ira Berkow 1984 New York Times News Service NEW YORK - On Saturday, the Brooklyn Schoolboy died. WaiteCharlesHoyt ... to rain delays so they could listen to the stories he spun, the best of which were captured in a record album called "WaiteHoyt in the Rain." His favorites were about his teammate Babe Ruth. His tales ... of that grand American folk hero helped to illuminate not only Ruth but WaiteHoyt as well. "The first time that I ever saw Babe Ruth was in the Boston Red Sox clubhouse," he once said. "I walked in to report ... to the Red Sox, and they took me around and introduced me to..."

Immediate Family

About Waite Charles Hoyt

Waite Charles Hoyt (September 9, 1899 – August 25, 1984) was an American right-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball, one of the dominant pitchers of the 1920s, and the winningest pitcher for the New York Yankees during that decade. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1969.

Early life

Hoyt was born in Brooklyn, New York and attended Erasmus Hall High School.[1] Despite being a Dodgers fan he was signed to a professional contract by New York Giants manager John McGraw when he was but 15. Because of his extreme youth, he was immediately nicknamed "The Schoolboy Wonder." But Hoyt would not achieve his greatest success as a Giant.

After a brief stint with the Giants, McGraw sent the young pitcher to the minors for seasoning. It wasn't long before he reappeared in the majors, this time with the Boston Red Sox. His performance there attracted the attention of the Yankees, who acquired him in 1920. In his first season as a Yankee, 1921, he rose to instant stardom, winning 19 games and pitching three complete games in the World Series without allowing an earned run — over his career, he would win six American League pennants with the Yankees and one with the Philadelphia Athletics. In his finest years with the Yankees, 1927 and 1928, Hoyt would post records of 22 wins and 7 losses with a 2.64 ERA and 23 wins and 7 losses with a 3.36 ERA. During his 21-year career, he won 10 or more games 12 times, 11 of them consecutively. Hoyt pitched for eight years after leaving the Yankees in 1930, but did not consistently display similar levels of pitching dominance.

Hoyt finished his career with a win-loss record of 237–182 and an ERA of 3.59. By the time he retired in 1938, he was the winningest pitcher in World Series history (his World Series record with the Yankees and A's is 6-4).

His Brooklyn origins along with his unique surname led to the probably-apocryphal story that he was injured on one occasion, and a fellow Brooklynite remarked, "Hurt's hoyt!"

In addition to the "Schoolboy" moniker appearing on his Hall of Fame plaque, Hoyt was also known as "The Merry Mortician." For when he wasn't playing baseball he spent days working as a funeral director and nights appearing on vaudeville. As a vaudevillian, he appeared with many of the most well-known performers of the day, including Jack Benny, Jimmy Durante, George Burns, and others. He kept in good shape during the off-season by playing semi-pro basketball.

He added to his repertoire by becoming an accomplished painter and writer. He was well-known as the pre-eminent authority on Babe Ruth, who was his teammate for almost 10 years. Robert Creamer, author of the definitive Ruth biography Babe, indicated in that book's introduction that the novella-length memoir written by Hoyt shortly after Ruth's death was "by far the most revealing and rewarding work on Ruth."

A longtime member of Alcoholics Anonymous, during the 1978 Old-Timers' Day, Hoyt said wistfully that he'd have won 300 games if he had stopped drinking during his playing days. After joining A.A., he remained sober for more than 40 years.

As a broadcaster

After retiring as a player, Hoyt went into broadcasting. During a stint as the host of "Grandstand and Bandstand" on WMCA, he tried to audition for the Yankees, but sponsor Wheaties vetoed him out of hand. The common view at the time was that former players didn't have enough of a vocabulary to be successful broadcasters. However, Hoyt was well known for telling umpire George Moriarty that he was "out of his element" and was better suited to being a policeman so he could "insult people with impunity."

Dodgers' voice Red Barber, however, thought more of Hoyt's abilities and hired him as color commentator and host of the pre- and post-game shows in 1940. After two years, he became the play-by-play voice of the Cincinnati Reds, a post he held for 24 years. He became as much a celebrity with the Reds as he was while a player. He was well known for calling games exclusively in past tense, which was and still is unusual for sportscasting. Where most baseball announcers would say, "Here's the pitch!" Hoyt would say, "There was the pitch!" He told author Curt Smith that he felt using past tense was more accurate because "as I speak to you, what happened a moment ago is gone." He often referred to himself as "a bad-news broadcaster," since the Reds were only a serious contender for the pennant nine times in his tenure. On August 16, 1948, Hoyt paid tribute to Babe Ruth, speaking on the air without notes for two hours upon learning of his death after a game. He called the 1961 World Series for NBC, during a time when it was common for the network to use the home team's primary broadcasters for the Fall Classic.

He retired from full-time broadcasting work in 1965, though he would later make appearances on both radio and television including doing the color commentary for the Reds telecasts in 1972. Hoyt was known for entertaining radio audiences with anecdotes during rain delays. A selection of these stories is collected on two record albums "The Best of Waite Hoyt in the Rain" and "The Best of Waite Hoyt in the Rain, Volume 2." Whether one considers it a blessing or a curse on the subsequent evolution of sports broadcasting, Hoyt was one of the first professional athletes to develop a successful career in broadcasting and his name frequently appears on "all-time best" broadcaster lists.

On June 10, 2007, the Cincinnati Reds honored Hoyt, Marty Brennaman, and Joe Nuxhall with replica microphones that will hang on the wall near the radio booth.

Later life

An eternal optimist, Hoyt married his third wife, Betty Dearie in 1982. Dearie, a longtime fan, was an associate of Warren Giles, first President of the Reds and subsequently of the National League. Betty still lives in Cincinnati. Betty is interviewed extensively in the video biography "Waite's World". The bio was released on VHS in 1997 and includes interviews with his son Chris, the late hall of fame broadcaster Joe Nuxhall, reporter and television personality Nick Clooney, former Red Jim O'Toole and many more.

The aging Hoyt died of heart failure while preparing for what he realized would be his final visit to the Hall of Fame, in Cooperstown, New York.